My LTE in the VDT Thursday.
I’ve added links to some of my inspirations. -jsq
Local leaders worked hard to get the
Valdosta Metropolitan Statistical Area declared.
Why now are they acting like a Ludowici
speed trap for local businesses?
Business exists to make a profit. Government exists to provide
public services like law enforcement, water, sewers, roads, and yes,
trash collection. Sure, balanced books are good. But money isn’t the
main point of government: providing what the people need is, and
the people didn’t ask the county to exchange the waste collection
centers for lower prices
that won’t last.
After saying he was also concerned about how Deep South Sanitation
is being treated,
Gary Wright said:
There is a little bit of a lack of democratic process in your meeting
groundrules.
On your website I don’t know anything in there that said
you have only thirty minute meetings for the entire thing.
I don’t know if this happens whenever you have a meeting
that’s only thirty minutes long; I’ve never been to one.
The right thing is not letting one company take all the money to New York
while putting another out of business, said a local resident
at Tuesday night’s
Lowndes County Commission Regular Session.
When you get a company like Veolia or Advanced that’s taking
all the money to New York, and then they come to my house
and they leave, I put garbage bags beside my can and they
won’t pick it up.
And then my guy, Cary Scarborough, comes
and picks up everything,
and you know what else he does guys? Continue reading →
The owner of Deep South Sanitation thanked the community and his family
and said he didn’t understand what was going on.
The Commission offered no explanation.
Cary Scarborough handed in a petition and sat down.
The crowd applauded.
Does the Commission already has reputation problems when
it’s being compared unfavorably to Lester Maddox?
A citizen canceled a business trip to ask “what if we only had one hardware store”
at last night’s
Lowndes County Commission Regular Session.
Our prices we pay would be through the roof; we would not have a choice.
Only fifteen minutes on any topic, said Chairman Bill Slaughter,
even though 8 people wanted to speak about trash
at last night’s
Lowndes County Commission Regular Session.
But there is no such rule in the county’s relevant ordinance.
He was enforcing an odd mashup of the county’s 25 January 2013 ordinance about
Citizens Wishing to Be Heard.
It does have these two rules: Continue reading →
Freedom or Order?
Regular Session, Lowndes County Commission (LCC),
Video by Gretchen Quarterman for Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange (LAKE),
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 11 June 2013.